How do you become a hacker in a country with no internet? | North Korea

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11 months ago

How do you become a hacker in a country with a restricted internet? Get NordVPN and enjoy online freedom with just a few clicks šŸ–±ļø Grab the NordVPN deal: https://content.nordvpn.com/41FqXxC Is there internet in North Korea? Is it illegal? The question doesnā€™t really have a yes or no answer. For some in North Korea, the internet is illegal, for others being online is a way to make a living. So how does one become a hacker in a country where simply watching a K-pop video is punishable by death? In this video, weā€™ll explore internet censorship in North Korea. Contents: 00:00 Intro 00:15 Internet censorship in North Korea 00:33 Kwangmyong 01:24 How people become hackers in North Korea 02:24 Outro *** North Korea. A country with some of the worldā€™s most extreme internet restrictions. And yet, itā€™s home to some of the worldā€™s most notorious hackers. How is that possible? To purchase a computer, a regular North Korean citizen needs to register it with the government first. But even if they can afford it, that doesnā€™t mean that the owner will get access to the internet as we know it. North Korea has its own state controlled version. Itā€™s a network completely separate from the rest of the world called Kwangmyong. Every website is filled with the regimeā€™s propaganda, whether itā€™s a government site or a recipe for soup. Donā€™t even think about accessing the global internet. Wherever you go online someoneā€™s going to be watching over your shoulder. It could be a device that takes screenshots every 5 minutes or a person standing right by you, checking what you browse. Veering off somewhere you shouldnā€™t is punishable by death. Merely watching a K-Pop video or a TV show from South Korea could mean execution. Less strict rules apply to the elites, but if youā€™re not a friend of Kim Jung Un, thereā€™s only one way to go online. Become a hacker for North Koreaā€™s government. So how do you become one? Usually, gifted students are recruited and placed in special schools in Pyongyang. After that they go off to train in Russia or China which have their own sophisticated cyberwar divisions. Their hacks range from attacks on U.S. movie companies, WannaCry ransomware, to South Koreaā€™s intelligence agency. But hacking isnā€™t just a cyber weapon and intimidation tactic to North Korea. Itā€™s also a source of money. And where does it go? Well, thatā€™s the scary part. According to the FBI, the stolen money goes to fund the regimeā€™s nuclear weaponā€™s programs. The attacks are not slowing down ā€” each year North Koreaā€™s online presence intensifies. *** šŸ“ŒOUR SOCIAL MEDIA šŸ“± šŸ”µFACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/NordVPN/ šŸ”µINSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/nordvpn/ šŸ”µTIKTOK: https://www.tiktok.com/@nordvpn šŸ”µTWITTER: https://twitter.com/NordVPN #NorthKorea #internetcensorship #documentary

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